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Ignored facts still exist |
Crap. I'm glad he got his metal of freedom when he did. . | |||
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Member |
Mark Steyn has a great right up on his web page and sums it up for me and I paraphrase: Talent on loan from God and just returned. Thanks Rush. | |||
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Member |
Rush always said he'd let us know when it's time to panic. He never did panic, honor his judgement. Set the controls for the heart of the Sun. | |||
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Political Cynic |
RIP El Rushbo the world is a poorer place without your wisdom | |||
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As Extraordinary as Everyone Else |
I don’t have anything profound to add except to say that I have a hole in my soul... ------------------ Eddie Our Founding Fathers were men who understood that the right thing is not necessarily the written thing. -kkina | |||
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An investment in knowledge pays the best interest |
RIP Dear Sir. Thank you indeed for sharing your wisdom to those of us that believe in God, Country and Liberty for so many years. You will be greatly missed. | |||
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Edge seeking Sharp blade! |
His favorite restaurant for years was Shroud's fried chicken in Kansas City. I need to pay an homage to Rush and go have some worldly victuals for him by proxy. | |||
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Lawyers, Guns and Money |
The Indispensable Man Rush Limbaugh, 1951-2021 by Mark Steyn Ave atque vale February 17, 2021 It is with profound sadness that we announce the death of Rush Limbaugh, a giant of American broadcasting, a uniquely talented performer, and a hugely generous man to whom I owe almost everything. Rush died this morning, after a year-long struggle with lung cancer. I was scheduled to guest-host today's show. Instead, as you can hear, his beloved Kathryn will be introducing a special program put together by the EIB team to celebrate a great man's life and legacy. It's a hard thing to do - compressing a glorious third-of-a-century into three hours - but Snerdley, Kraig, Mike, Allie and everyone else I've worked with there for so many years will do their best. Usually, in this line of work, if you're lucky, you get a moment - a year or two when you're the in-thing - and you hope to hold enough of that moment as it slowly fades away to keep you going till retirement. Rush did something unprecedented in the history of TV and radio. Commercial broadcasting began in the United States in 1920: The Rush Limbaugh Show came along two-thirds of a century later, became the Number One program very quickly, and has stayed at the top all the way to today - for a third of the entire history of the medium. And throughout all those decades Rush and his show stayed exactly the same: a forensic breakdown of the day's news, punctuated by musical parodies, satirical sketches, and Rush's own optimism and good humor, even through this last terrible year. The comedy is what his many enemies and half his own side missed: Rush took politics seriously but not solemnly. In the early years of the war on terror, he introduced an Afghan version of himself "with talent on loan from Allah" and sold Club Gitmo merchandise for those seeking a tropical retreat from jihad. When Brokeback Mountain was in the news, the show ran trailers for Return to Saddle-Sore Canyon: "It's John McCain and Lindsey Graham as you've always wanted to see them!" Which, in my case at least, is true. I know precisely when I first heard Rush. It was not long after he started the show and not long after I bought my pad in New Hampshire. I was driving some visitors from London through the North Maine Woods toward New Brunswick in that dead zone where the only thing that comes in is the soft-and-easy station on 94.9 FM from the top of Mount Washington. And then that died, and there was nothing, and I forgot to switch it off so it was automatically scanning up and around the dial as we chit-chatted in the car. And then suddenly it found some guy, and there he was talking about "the arts-and-croissants crowd" moving into your town, and reading out press releases from NOW (the National Association of Women), whom he called the NAGS (National Association of Gals), and playing Andy Williams' version of "Born Free" punctuated by gunfire to accompany any environmental story. And, in my car, conversation ceased. My friends were what you might call slightly skeptical lefties, so they disagreed with what Rush said on the issues but they were rapt by the way he said it. Because they had never heard anybody say it like that before. It was a unique combination - absolute piercing philosophical clarity, and a grand rollicking presentational style honed through all the lean years of minor-market disc-jockeying. First, he perfected the style, and then he applied it to the content. When Clinton was elected, Rush opened his shows, for years, with "America Held Hostage, Day Thirty-Nine... Day Seventy-Three... Day Hundred-and-Twenty Four...", and when Newt's Republicans won the 1994 mid-terms he started with James Brown singing "I Feel Good". One man doing what he wanted to do saved an entire medium - AM radio - and turned all its old rules upside down: Traditionally, morning drive is your big audience, and everything tapers off from there. Rush figured that everyone needs a local guy at that time, with traffic and weather updates, and that the opportunity to build a national show lay in the hitherto somnolent slot of noon-to-three Eastern/nine-to-twelve Pacific. And within a couple of years hundreds of stations were building the entire schedule around the midday guy. In the scheme of things, I am not sure how many of those stations will be able to keep that going without him. Throughout his entire time on air, there were genius GOP consultants who, in reaction to any electoral setbacks, would insist that what the GOP needed to do was come up with a way to ditch Limbaugh. As I said on air many years ago: Really? For almost a third of a century, Rush's audience was over half the total Republican vote. How many do all you genius "Republican reformers" bring to the table? I've recounted previously the first time I was asked to guest-host, back in 2006, when I happened to be down in Australia and the Prime Minister, John Howard, asked me to some or other event a day or two hence. And I politely declined, saying I had to get back to America to host The Rush Limbaugh Show. "I hear that's a pretty big show," said the PM. "Yeah," I replied. "Twenty-five, thirty million listeners." "'Strewth," said Mr Howard. "Rush has more listeners than we have Australians." Indeed. And all these GOP clever-clogs never explain, once you throw Rush and his millions overboard, what's going to replace them. Powerful politicians and longtime fans were often surprised, upon meeting him, to find a man who was quite private and indeed shy - because, like many radio guys, he had no desire to have a public persona other than at the microphone. Unlike so many others in this business, Rush was hugely generous and totally secure. Unlike other shows of left and right, where the staff come and go every six weeks, everyone at the EIB Network has been there fifteen, twenty, thirty years. That includes, in a very peripheral way, yours truly. When I first started guest-hosting, I found it odd that, on the rare occasions Rush mentioned the subs, it would be to put them down. Because, I mean, who would do that? But Rush is the least insecure star on the planet, and I came to see that he was actually teaching the neophytes a very important lesson: You guys need to be completely secure too - because it's the only way to survive in this wretched media. I came to appreciate that being put down by Rush was actually a far greater compliment than him doing some boilerplate hey-he's-a-great-guy shtick. And one of the saddest days of my fifteen years with EIB was when I heard Rush a few months back expressing genuine, sincere gratitude for something I'd said about him a few days earlier. As I pleaded on air, I just wanted the old Rush back scoffing at his guest-hosts - so we'd know all was well in the world. So I owe Rush the biggest break of my career in America, and I owe him even more for sticking with me after the CRTV breach of contract when certain extremely prominent figures on the American right were bombarding him with multiple texts and emails to fire me from the guest-host's slot. It would have been the easiest thing in the world for him to have gone along with that. But he didn't. And that's the only reason I'm still around today. I have come to admire him even more this last year. When he announced his diagnosis, we all knew this story only has one ending, and it's just a question of how many chapters there are leading up to it. Rush loved what he did more than anything in life except his family. He had no interest in going to Tahiti to watch the sunset. He wanted to be behind the Golden EIB Microphone every day that he could. So initially he took a couple of days off every three weeks for treatment, and then the two days became four, and the treatment weeks took their toll and spilled into the following week. But, through it all, he remained determined to do every single show he could - because, aside from anything else, he wanted to make sure he, his listeners, his brand, his stations did everything they could to put President Trump across the finish line on November 3rd. Events didn't quite turn out the way he wanted - although they might have if more people had worked as hard as a man ravaged by Stage IV cancer did, in defiance of his doctors' prognostications. The last three months, when he and Kathryn had surely earned those Tahitian sunsets, took a terrible toll. But he stayed on the air until just a fortnight ago - because above all he wanted to keep faith with tens of millions of listeners, many of whom had been listening to him their entire lives and could not imagine a world without him. We are about to find out. I am well aware of the ironies of the headline. My father liked to caution me with the old saw that the graveyard is full of indispensable men. But, as the conventional bias of the legacy media yielded to something far more severe from the woke billionaires of Social Media, Rush remained the Big Voice on the Right, the largest obstacle to the complete marginalization of conservative ideas in our culture. All those of us who labored in his shadows owe it to him to continue the fight. To modify Rush's tag line: Talent returned to God. https://www.steynonline.com/11...he-indispensable-man "Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." -- Justice Janice Rogers Brown "The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth." -rduckwor | |||
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Partial dichotomy |
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Void Where Prohibited |
I am truly deeply saddened. I listened to him for so long he feels like a friend. Rest in Peace, Mr. Limbaugh. "If Gun Control worked, Chicago would look like Mayberry, not Thunderdome" - Cam Edwards | |||
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Triggers don't pull themselves |
He's been a true inspiration for conservatives and will be greatly missed. Condolences to his family. Michael | |||
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SIG-Music to my ears! |
Rush, you will be missed. Thank you for all you've done. Music is mediator between spiritual and sensual life. ~ Ludwig van Beethoven | |||
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Member |
My work days won’t be the same, that’s for sure. I first started listening to Rush around 1993, I was just out of high school, and a regular customer of the gas station where I worked told me about him. I tuned in to hear a man saying everything that I thought and believed, and I’ve been a listener ever since. RIP “missr Limbaugh” (that’s said in the “new castrati” voice) thoughts and prayers to you, your family, friends. PS, the comments on fakebook are really getting my blood pressure up. | |||
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Member |
Returned to God. Thank you for all you have done. Condolences to his family. One could easily call him an American hero | |||
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always with a hat or sunscreen |
I had trouble sleeping last night. When I finally fell asleep I didn't wake up until 11:30am. Turned on the radio as is my norm and heard Rush. Good I thought. Then someone said something about sharing best moments. Eh? What? Then I opened my emails on my cellphone and found one from a friend saying "RIP Rush." Oh crap! Listened some more. Heard "Limbaugh Legacy." And yes at noon they re-played Katheryn's very moving opening announcement about Rush passing this morning. We are saddened. We are diminished. But we remain resolute! Certifiable member of the gun toting, septuagenarian, bucket list workin', crazed retiree, bald is beautiful club! USN (RET), COTEP #192 | |||
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W07VH5 |
CNBC implied he was a racist: Can't they let a man rest? | |||
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always with a hat or sunscreen |
Why soil this thread by citing the predictable slurs from the putrid left? Certifiable member of the gun toting, septuagenarian, bucket list workin', crazed retiree, bald is beautiful club! USN (RET), COTEP #192 | |||
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Member |
A horrible dose of reality to be sure but we'll get past this. God willing, we'll be stronger and Rush will have had a big hand in that. Set the controls for the heart of the Sun. | |||
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Dances With Tornados |
I searched and clicked on a few web stories of his passing. You most certainly tell in the first few words if it's a mainstream liberal writer. They ugly shit they are saying, the words they are using, is awful. Fuck'em all, the shitheads! RIP Rush, thank you for what you are and for what you did for us. . | |||
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crazy heart |
Rush was one of a kind. Truly a sad day. RIP Rush. ... | |||
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